The community was established in 1935 by members of the Startz family, who built a small store at what was then a rural crossroads in the ranchland northwest of New Braunfels. For nearly thirty years it remained exactly that — a country store serving a handful of ranching families.
Everything changed with Canyon Dam. When the Corps of Engineers completed the dam in 1964 and the reservoir began filling, Startzville found itself on the primary access road between I-35 and the lake. The community began to grow as subdivisions, campgrounds, and lake-oriented businesses spread along FM 306. By the mid-1980s, over 80 new neighborhoods had been developed in the Canyon Lake area, and Startzville — along with Sattler — transformed from a small ranching crossroads into a service community for tens of thousands of lake residents and visitors.
Today Startzville is part of the Canyon Lake census-designated place (CDP population 31,124 in 2020). It has no separate municipal government, no city limits sign, no formal boundary. You know you're in Startzville because FM 306 widens slightly, the gas stations appear, and the lake-supply stores start advertising bait and ice.
FM 306 through Startzville is the Canyon Lake area's commercial spine. Gas stations (the last ones before the lake's south shore), convenience stores, a few restaurants and bars, storage facilities, real estate offices, and the kind of small businesses that serve a lake community — boat repair, propane refill, RV supplies. The Startzville Volunteer Fire Department is the primary emergency response for the surrounding area and hosts community events including an annual fish fry fundraiser.
There is no downtown. There is no historic district. Startzville is functional — it exists because people need gas and groceries on the way to the lake, and because the families who live in the surrounding subdivisions need services closer than New Braunfels.
Startzville sits at the junction where FM 306 meets FM 2673 and several local roads branch toward different parts of the lake. From I-35 in New Braunfels, take exit 191 west on FM 306 — Startzville is about 8 miles. The nearest H-E-B is back in New Braunfels at FM 306 and I-35. Cell service is reliable along the FM 306 corridor.
Startzville is not a destination. It's the last supply stop. If you forgot ice, sunscreen, or bait, this is where you get it. If you need gas before the lake or propane for the campsite, this is the corridor. It exists because Canyon Lake exists, and it serves the function that every lake community needs — the commercial strip between the highway and the water.
FM 306 is the road that connects I-35 to Canyon Lake. It begins at exit 191 in New Braunfels and runs northwest through increasingly rural terrain until it reaches the lake's south shore. Startzville occupies the middle section — past the last New Braunfels subdivisions but before the lake itself. The road carries every boat trailer, every RV, every carload of tubers headed to the Guadalupe or the lake on a summer Saturday. Traffic backs up on holiday weekends, particularly at the FM 306/FM 2673 junction where routes split toward different parts of the lake.
The businesses along this corridor exist because of that traffic. They're not destinations — they're services. The gas stations know their customers are passing through. The bait shops know you forgot something. The storage facilities hold the boats and RVs that don't fit in subdivision garages. This is infrastructure, not atmosphere.
The Canyon Lake CDP grew from roughly 9,000 in 1990 to over 31,000 in 2020. Startzville absorbed much of that growth's commercial demand. What was a single store in 1935 is now a miles-long commercial strip. The Startz family's original store is long gone, replaced by the kind of development that happens when a rural crossroads becomes a commuter corridor.
New subdivisions continue to push into the hills around Startzville. Many residents commute to New Braunfels or San Antonio for work and treat the Canyon Lake area as a bedroom community with lake access. This changes the character of the corridor — more traffic, more demand for services, more pressure on FM 306's two-lane capacity. TxDOT has studied widening FM 306 for years. The road remains two lanes.
The Startzville Volunteer Fire Department is the primary emergency response organization for the area between New Braunfels city limits and the lake. Like most rural Texas VFDs, it runs on volunteer labor and fundraising — the annual fish fry is both a community event and a budget necessity. Response times are longer than in the city, and the nearest hospital (Resolute Health in New Braunfels) is 15 miles away. This is worth knowing if you're renting a lake house for the weekend.
The FM 306/FM 2673 junction in Startzville is where routes diverge. FM 306 continues northwest to the lake's south shore (Cranes Mill Park, Canyon Park). FM 2673 heads north toward Sattler, the dam, the tailwater, and the north shore (Potters Creek Park). If you're going to the lake to boat, you probably stay on FM 306. If you're going to the river to tube or fish, you turn north on FM 2673. Startzville is the decision point.
Startzville is not a place you visit. It's not a place you photograph. It has no historic buildings, no scenic overlooks, no restaurants worth driving to. It is purely functional — a commercial corridor that exists because 31,000 people live around a lake that has no incorporated city to provide services. If Canyon Lake ever incorporates (a recurring discussion that never quite reaches a vote), Startzville would likely become its commercial district. Until then, it remains what it has been since 1964: the supply stop between the highway and the water.
Startzville is part of the canyonlake.ai network. Guide: Gus.